Hughes didn't see City sack coming

MANCHESTER, England (AFP) –
Mark Hughes confirmed on Sunday that he had no idea he was about to be sacked as Manchester City manager following the club's 4-3 victory at home to Sunderland.

Saturday's win left City sixth in the English Premier League table but, having spent some 200 million pounds on players, City's Abu Dhabi-based owner Sheikh Mansour decided a run of two wins in 11 Premier League games wasn't good enough.

Hughes was sacked on Saturday and in the same statement City announced that Roberto Mancini, the former Inter Milan boss, would be their new manager.

After Saturday's final whistle, Hughes applauded all sections of the Eastlands ground and appeared to wave goodbye to the fans.

But in a statement issued through the League Managers' Association, Hughes made it clear he had no prior knowledge he was about to be dismissed.

"I was informed after yesterday's (Saturday's) match against Sunderland that my contract with Manchester City was being terminated with immediate effect," Hughes said.

"Notwithstanding media coverage to the contrary, I was given no forewarning as to the club's decision.

"Given the speed with which my successor's appointment was announced, it would appear that the club had made its decision some considerable time ago.

"I am extremely disappointed not to have been given the opportunity to see through my plans at the club," the Welshman added.

"At the beginning of the season I sat down with the owners and it was agreed that a realistic target for the season would be sixth place in the Barclays Premier League, or in the region of 70 points.

"All of this was communicated to the players and we all knew where we stood," the former Manchester United striker added.

It seemed as if Hughes, who has steered City to this season's League Cup semi-final against Manchester United, was paying the price for the club's eight league draws this season.

Hughes said: "Whilst everyone at the club would obviously have wanted to see more wins, we were absolutely on target at the time of my dismissal.

"Only recently we had terrific victories against both Arsenal and Chelsea."

Hughes said he understood the pressure for success that came with such a massive investment in new players but said he was saddened he had not been given the time to oversee the success he was sure was on its way to City.

"I have always been aware of the responsibility that comes with being afforded the luxury of a significant transfer budget, and I was grateful that the club supported me with significant investment in players," he said.

"I very much regret, however, that I will not now be able to enjoy the success that would undoubtedly have followed in the light of that investment."

His statement continued: "I would like to thank the fans for their support throughout my time at the club and particularly at this difficult time.

"I wish the club every success in the future, particularly in relation to the forthcoming Carling (League) Cup semi-final, the club's first semi-final for 28 years."

Meanwhile, Carlo Ancelotti, coach of Premier League leaders Chelsea, believes his Italian compatriot Mancini will be a hit in Manchester.

"Mancini is a very good coach, he has very good experience in Italy and he did a good job there. He can do a very good job at Manchester City."

Mancini's appointment prompted little fanfare in his homeland.

"Sheikh Mansour is in a hurry to win and he wants only stars," claimed the Gazzetta dello Sport.

"Mansour is in a hurry to dominate the Premier League and Europe and if Mancini manages to penetrate the big four, replacing Liverpool, he will get a blank cheque in the summer."

Corriere dello Sport believes Mancini has been set some tough targets.

"Now he's asked to guide the Citizens at least into the Champions League zone and hopefully win the League Cup as well," it said.

According to Tuttosport this move had been in the offing for some time.

"Mancini dedicated himself to learning English these last few months so he could hit the ground running," it said.

"He met several times with the Sheikh Mansour and was even ready to take over from (Mark) Hughes at the end of last season."

Mancini is due to hold his first news conference as City manager on Monday.

Evangelical church opens doors fully to gays

DENVER – The auditorium lights turned low, the service begins with the familiar rhythms of church: children singing, hugs and handshakes of greeting, a plea for donations to fix the boiler.
Then the 55-year-old pastor with spiked gray hair and blue jeans launches into his weekly welcome, a poem-like litany that includes the line "queer or straight here, there's no hate here."
The Rev. Mark Tidd initially used the word "gay." But he changed it to "queer" because it's the preferred term of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people invited to participate fully at Highlands Church.
Tidd is an outlaw pastor of sorts. His community, less than a year old, is an evangelical Christian church guided both by the Apostle's Creed and the belief that gay people can embrace their sexual orientation as God-given and seek fulfillment in committed same-sex relationships.
Disagreements over homosexuality and the Bible have divided mainline Protestant churches for years. In evangelical churches, though, the majority view has held firm — the Bible clearly condemns homosexual acts. The common refrain at evangelical churches: "love the sinner, hate the sin."
But with younger evangelicals and broader society showing greater acceptance of homosexuality, many evangelical churches can expect, at the least, a deeper exploration of the issue.
"Highlands Church represents a breakout position, where you have a gay-affirming stance that moves beyond the traditional kind of liberal-conservative divide," said Mark Achtemeier, an associate professor at University of Dubuque Theological Seminary, which is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). "I'm finding lots of moderate conservatives just think there's something wrong with a default position of excluding gays from the life of the church."
David Dockery, president of Union University, a Southern Baptist school in Jackson, Tenn., believes Highlands is — and is likely to remain — outside of the mainstream of evangelical churches.
"I don't think it can be taken for granted anymore that the traditional evangelical view will be adopted by the coming generations given the changes and shifts in our culture," Dockery said.
That makes it all the more important, he says, for evangelical leaders to clearly teach the traditional views on homosexuality.
The people of Highlands Church — those who stood with their renegade pastor and others who left feeling betrayed — have learned that taking an uncommon road comes at a cost.
______
Craig Ellsworth grew up in an Assemblies of God church and has spent most of his life in evangelical churches. He was an administrative pastor at a large church for 10 years.
But because Ellsworth is gay, he said he felt he could never fully be himself. While straight co-workers were encouraged to date and find partners, Ellsworth would risk losing his job if he did.
"There was what I was told in churches, and there was hearing God and knowing what I believe is true of God," said Ellsworth, 48, who is not in a relationship. "The two didn't really line up."
Ellsworth started attending Highlands Church last summer.
"I love being in a faith community that is loving and being Christlike to others without an agenda and without labels," said Ellsworth.
Tidd said Highlands is not a one-issue church but one committed to social justice. He describes it as "radically inclusive but still rooted in the essentials of the Gospel." The church discourages promiscuity and encourages healthy lifelong relationships.

Tidd said he supports gay marriage and would perform same-sex blessings if asked. A gay man in a committed relationship sits on the church's board of trustees.

"Our position is not one of lenience, but a matter of justice," said Tidd, a married father of five. "It's not that we don't acknowledge the reality of sin. It's not a sin to be gay or act in accordance with your nature."

Tidd was raised a nominal Catholic in Boulder, Colo. He had a born-again Christian experience and joined the Jesus movement of the 1960s, which blended hippie culture and Christianity. Eventually Tidd was ordained in the Christian Reformed Church and shared its conservative position of homosexuality.

His change of heart began when, as a pastor in Boulder, a distraught couple sought his counsel when their young daughter began identifying as a boy — introducing Tidd to the transgender issue.

He began to question applying the "plain meaning" of ancient Biblical text to here-and-now homosexuality. The Bible, read literally, suggests the earth is flat and could be used to justify slavery, he said.

He accepted the Biblical interpretation of other gay-affirming Christians: that verses condemning homosexual behavior refer to idolatrous pagan worship or violence.

"We reach an understanding of the Bible not just by studying God's word, but by studying his world," Tidd said. "If you think he's the author of both, they both inform each other."

If evangelicals can disagree about end-times theology and baptism methods and still be considered authentic Christians, he thought, why can't the same tent hold disagreements about homosexuality?

Tidd took his beliefs in 2006 to a job as a pastor at Denver's Pathways Church, an urban evangelical congregation that prides itself as a safe place to ask questions. Tidd said he didn't hide his views from church leaders but didn't air them at length as a pastor, either; homosexuality was never a central issue for the church.

But behind the scenes, the societal debate over homosexuality and Pathways' welcoming posture had forced its hand. Ed Briscoe, a member of Pathways' board of elders, said leaders felt they needed guidance on whether gay and lesbian members not living in celibacy should be allowed in church leadership.

A church elder produced a nine-page case for the traditional evangelical stance. While making clear the church does not consider homosexuality "the worst sin or the most evil practice," the statement says the Bible uniformly condemns homosexual relationships and only permits sex between a man and woman united in marriage. "God made male and female to fit together," it says, and homosexual acts violate God's intent.

The door at Pathways would remain open to gays and lesbians. But with leadership had to come celibacy.

____

There is disagreement about how the issue played out as Tidd was to launch Highlands as a Pathways satellite in a gentrifying Denver neighborhood last year. Tidd said he was told his stance on homosexuality would not be a problem, but Briscoe said it wasn't clear what Tidd intended for the new site.

Last summer, the Pathways statement on homosexuality, which had not been intended for general distribution, began circulating among church members. Tidd, who said he had only recently learned of the paper, began fielding questions about where he stood. Some Pathways members made it known they would stop donating if Tidd remained on staff, he said.

So Tidd and Pathways parted ways. Highlands become a stand-alone church no longer under Pathways' authority and Tidd announced it would be open and affirming to LGBT people.

Tidd said that in light of the decision, he also plans to give up his Christian Reformed Church ministerial credentials because his position conflicts with the denomination's.

The exodus from Highlands began as the reason for the break became known. Tidd said over two months, the church lost half its attendance and two-thirds of its financial support.

Jim and Chris Stuhr, who were members of Highlands' leadership team, said they were initially troubled after learning of Tidd's views and set out to research a subject they didn't know well.

Their conclusion — that the Bible strictly prohibits the practice of homosexuality — led to what the couple called a heart-wrenching decision to leave a church they had such hopes for.

"I have read the explanations and Biblical arguments of those who promote the gay lifestyle as acceptable in the Bible and it seems to me that they are an exercise in hermeneutical gymnastics," Jim Stuhr said.

At the same time, the church's position began to attract new members and strengthened the resolve of existing ones like Maura Weiler and Chad DiPrince, a married couple from the neighborhood.

"We have no real reason to champion this thing, other than we think it's right," said DiPrince, a 34-year-old Web developer and artist. "I just didn't feel God would tell a person to deny a big part of who they are and to keep it a secret."

For others, it's not black and white. Briscoe, the Pathways elder, said he and his wife are still weighing where they stand and worship at both Highlands and Pathways.

"I think people are going to reopen their Bible and look at it and not assume anymore," Briscoe said, adding that he thinks the Highlands position can be held by "mature, faithful, Bible-believing people."

The two churches maintain a relationship — their members will head to New Orleans over spring break to work on a housing rehabilitation project, and other joint service projects are planned.

Just over a month ago, 81 adults showed up for 10 a.m. services at Highlands Church. Tidd started draping white ribbon over the back rows so people would sit together up front.

Last Sunday, there was a record crowd of 220. The auditorium was twinkling with Christmas lights. And four couples carried babies to the front of the church for Tidd to bless.

____

On the Net: http://highlandschurchdenver.com/

Spyker Cars renews bid to buy Saab from GM

STOCKHOLM – In a final attempt to rescue Saab Automobile AB, Dutch auto maker Spyker Cars on Sunday submitted a new offer to buy the Swedish brand from General Motors Co.
Spyker said it has submitted a new 11-point proposal to GM, addressing the issues that made talks collapse earlier this week.
GM on Friday said it would wind down Saab because issues arose during the sales talks with Spyker that could not be resolved, and the window of time to complete a deal was small.
Spyker Chief Executive Officer Victor R. Muller said he hoped the new offer would make GM change its mind.
"We are very confident that our renewed offer will remove the impasse that was standing in the way of an agreement on Friday, and this would still allow us to conclude the deal prior to the expiry of the deadline originally set by GM of Dec. 31," he said in a statement.
"We have made every effort to resolve the issues that were preventing the conclusion of this matter and we have asked GM and all other involved parties to seriously consider this offer," he added.
Muller said the new offer removes a demand that a loan from the European Investment Bank to Saab be approved before the end of the year, and has the full backing of Saab's management.
It said the new offer expires on Monday, giving GM little time to make a decision.
Saab employs about 3,400 people worldwide, most of them at its main plant in Trollhattan, Sweden.
Gert-Inge Andersson, leader of the local government in Trollhattan, daid he did not yet dare to believe in the new offer.
"It's bordering on torture, of citizens and the employees at Saab, when messages like these fly back and forth," he told local news agency TT
Swedish government officials declined to comment.
GM bought a 50 percent stake and management control of Saab for $600 million in 1989 and gained full ownership in 2000 for $125 million more.
In February, the Swedish brand went into creditor protection in an effort by GM to sell the unit. A consortium led by Swedish sports car maker Koenigsegg Automotive AB signed a preliminary deal to buy the brand in June but dropped out in November.

Saudi Maaden, Alcoa in $10.8 billion aluminum deal

RIYADH (Reuters) –
State-run Saudi Arabian Mining Co (Maaden) (1211.SE) and U.S. aluminum giant Alcoa (AA.N) agreed on Sunday to build a $10.8 billion aluminum complex in the world's top oil exporter, targeting the Middle East from 2013.

Under the deal, the companies form a joint venture to set up a 1.8 million ton-per-year refinery, a 740,000 ton-per-year smelter, a bauxite mine with an annual capacity of 4 million tons and a rolling mill with a capacity of up to 460,000 tons.

The firms have yet to raise the financing for the complex mainly planned to be built in Ras Azzour on the kingdom's Gulf Coast close to Maaden's phosphate fertilizer plants.

"We will go for financing during 2010," said Maaden Chief Executive Abdullah al-Dabbagh.

Last December, Rio Tinto Alcan (RIO.L) abandoned its 49 percent stake in a 740,000 ton-per-year smelter project because it was unable to obtain financing due to the global financial crisis. The project was then budgeted at $8 billion.

The smelter and mill are slated to start production in 2013 while the refinery and mine would come online in 2014, Dabbagh told reporters in the Saudi capital Riyadh.

The project aims at "making Saudi Arabia and the Middle East a major hub for aluminum production and its downstream industries," Dabbagh added.

NO FUNDING YET

Alcoa Chief Executive Klaus Kleinfeld told Reuters the costs of $10.8 billion would be split, with the U.S. firm and its partners paying 40 percent while Maaden is to handle 60 percent.

He said a variety of funding options were being considered, when asked whether Alcoa could conduct a capital hike or go for debt.

Plans call for the expansion of the mill to 460,000 tons of aluminum sheets, ends and tabs stocks for the manufacturing of aluminum cans, the firms said.

Development will take place in two phases, starting with the smelter and rolling mill to be followed by the mine and refinery, Dabbagh said during a signing ceremony.

For the alumina refinery, Maaden has received four bids for a $1 billion engineering, procurement and construction management contract, industry sources said earlier this month.

U.S. Fluor Corp (FLR.N) teamed up with Worley Parsons (WOR.AX) and Canada's SNC-Lavalin Group Inc (SNC.TO) joined forces with Hatch to submit proposals. France's Technip (TECF.PA) and U.S. Bechtel bid individually.

Maaden is investing about 60 billion riyals ($16 billion) to develop the kingdom's phosphate, bauxite, gold and industrial minerals and help reduce reliance on oil.

A phosphate and fertilizer joint venture with Saudi Basic Industries Corp (SABIC) (2010.SE) is due online in 2011.

($1=3.750 Saudi riyals)

(Additional reporting by Reem Shamseddine in Khobar; editing by John Stonestreet and Matthew Lewis)

Spyker Cars renews offer for GM's Saab

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) –
Dutch luxury carmarker Spyker Cars NV said on Sunday it submitted a renewed offer to buy Sweden's Saab from General Motors Co. after last-ditch talks to secure a deal collapsed on Friday.

GM said on Friday it would start shutting down the loss-making firm after talks with Spyker ended. The move to abandon the 60-year-old Swedish auto brand would eliminate 3,400 jobs in Sweden and drop 1,100 Saab dealers.

But Spyker said it has submitted a renewed offer including an 11-point proposal addressing each of the issues that arose during the due diligence process.

"We have made every effort to resolve the issues that were preventing the conclusion of this matter and we have asked GM and all other involved parties to seriously consider this offer," Spyker Cars Chief Executive Victor Muller said in a statement.

Spyker Cars said the new offer eliminates the need for an European Investment Bank (EIB) loan approval prior to year end, which would allow the deal to be concluded within GM's deadline.

Muller added Spyker cars was confident its offer would remove the impasse and allow it to conclude the deal prior to the expiry of the deadline originally set by GM of December 31.

The renewed offer is valid until 5 a.m. EST on Monday December 21.

(Reporting by Aaron Gray-Block; editing by John Stonestreet)

Bundchen reveals name of son with Brady: Benjamin

BOSTON – The baby boy keeping New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and supermodel wife Gisele Bundchen awake at night has a name: Benjamin.
The baby was born Dec. 8. But the day after the birth, Brady said he and Bundchen hadn't chosen a name. Word finally came out Friday when Bundchen posted a holiday message on her Web site.
Bundchen revealed the baby's name when she wrote, "Benjamin is a blessing and I could not be happier."
Brady and Bundchen were married in February. Benjamin is Bundchen's first child. Brady also has a 2-year-old son, Jack, with actress Bridget Moynahan.
Brady had joked earlier in the week about how hard it was to sleep with a new baby in the house, saying it was "a little tough early." He added, "It's coming."

Wheelchair Lift

Many are concerned, however, that the greatest need is in developing nations -- where the vast bulk of the estimated 650 million people with disabilities reside. A great deal of work is needed to address concerns ranging from accessibility and education to self-empowerment and self-supporting employment and beyond. In the past few years, disability rights activists have also focused on obtaining full citizenship for the disabled.

The disability rights movement, led by individuals with disabilities, began in the 1970s. This self-advocacy is often seen as largely responsible for the shift toward independent living and accessibility. The term "Independent Living" was taken from 1959 California legislation which enabled people who had acquired a disability due to polio to leave hospital wards and move back into the community with the help of cash benefits for the purchase of personal assistance with the activities of daily living. With its origins in the U.S. civil rights and consumer movements of the late 1960s, the movement and its philosophy have since spread to other continents influencing self-perception, organization and social policy.

Wheelchair Lift

TSA puts 5 employees on leave over online posting

WASHINGTON – Five Transportation Security Administration employees have been placed on administrative leave since it was discovered that sensitive guidelines about airport passenger screening were posted on the Internet.
The move was disclosed as senators questioned administration officials Wednesday about the second embarrassing security flap at the Homeland Security Department in as many weeks. The Secret Service, also part of the sprawling department, is investigating how a couple of would-be reality TV stars were able to get into a White House state dinner without an invitation.
Assistant Homeland Security secretary David Heyman told senators Wednesday that a full investigation into the Internet security lapse is under way and the TSA employees have been taken off duty pending the results of that probe. He did not say how many employees were put on leave. A TSA official who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation said five employees were placed on administrative leave Tuesday.
The Homeland Security Department has also stopped posting documents with security information either in full or in part on the Internet until the TSA review is complete, Heyman told the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told a separate hearing by the Senate Judiciary committee Wednesday that the department is taking steps to make sure this never happens again, and the department's inspector general is conducting its own investigation.
Napolitano added, however, that "the traveling public was not at risk."
The passenger screening document was improperly on the Internet in a way that could offer insight into how to sidestep security.
"Even what appeared to be an innocent posting to help federal contractors can have serious consequences for our security," Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Wednesday.
Heyman said he did not know who at TSA signed off on the document going on the Web.
The TSA removed the document from the Internet on Sunday after the lapse was reported on a blog.
Among many sensitive sections, the document outlines who is exempt from certain additional screening measures, including members of the U.S. armed forces, governors and lieutenant governors, the mayor of Washington, D.C., and their immediate families.
It also offers examples of identification documents that screeners accept, including congressional, federal air marshal and CIA ID cards; and it explains that diplomatic pouches and certain foreign dignitaries with law enforcement escorts are not subjected to any screening at all. It said certain methods of verifying identification documents aren't used on all travelers during peak travel crushes.
TSA said the document is now outdated. It was posted in March by TSA on the Federal Business Opportunity site. The posting was improper because sensitive information was not properly protected, TSA spokeswoman Kristin Lee said.
As a result, some Web sites, using widely available software, were able to uncover the original text of sections that had been blacked out for security reasons. On Sunday, the Wandering Aramean blog pointed out the document in a posting titled "The TSA makes another stupid move."
According to the blog, TSA posted a redacted version of the document but did not delete the sensitive information from the file. Instead of removing the text, the government covered it up with a black box. But the text was still embedded in the document and could be uncovered.
TSA had the document removed from the Federal Business Opportunity site on Dec. 6 but copies — with the redacted portions exposed — circulated on the Internet and remain posted on other Web sites not controlled by the government.
Noting that the transportation agency uses multiple layers of security, Lee said, "TSA is confident that screening procedures currently in place remain strong."
The document also describes these screening protocols:

_Individuals with a passport from Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Libya, Syria, Sudan, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Somalia, Iraq, Yemen, or Algeria, should be given additional screening unless there are specific instructions not to.

_Aircraft flight crew members in uniform with valid IDs are not subject to restrictions on liquid, gel, aerosol and footwear.

Former TSA Administrator Kip Hawley said the document is not something a security agency would want to inadvertently post online, but he said it's not a road map for terrorists. "Hyperventilating that this is a breach of security that's going to endanger the public is flat wrong," Hawley said.

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie G. Thompson, D-Miss., was more concerned.

"Undoubtedly, this raises potential security concerns across our transportation system," Thompson wrote the agency Tuesday in a letter recommending that an independent federal agency review the incident. The chairwoman of the panel's transportation security subcommittee, Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee, D-Texas, also signed the letter.

___

Associated Press writer Larry Margasak contributed to this report.

Baby born to Gisele Bundchen, quarterback Tom Brady

NEW YORK (AFP) –
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady confirmed Wednesday that he and Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen have had a baby boy.

Brady told a press conference in Foxborough, Massachusetts, the birth of his son on Tuesday was "obviously a wonderful experience in my life."

The American football star, vying to lead his team to the playoffs, made clear he wouldn't be spending much time changing nappies ahead of Sunday's game against the Carolina Panthers.

"As a captain and leader of this team, the last thing they need from me is to be really not focused on the job at hand," Brady said. "I owe it to the guys in the locker room."

Brady and Bundchen, married in twin ceremonies in Los Angeles and Costa Rica earlier this year. Brady has another son from a previous relationship with actress Bridget Moynihan, with whom he was not married.

IPOD Speakers

The coil is oriented coaxially inside the gap, a small circular volume (a hole, slot, or groove) in the magnetic structure within which it can move back and forth. The gap establishes a concentrated magnetic field between the two poles of a permanent magnet; the outside of the gap being one pole and the center post (a.k.a., the pole-piece) being the other. The center post and back-plate are sometimes a single piece called the yoke.

Very few manufacturers use electrically powered field coils as was common in the earliest designs. The size and type of magnet and details of the magnetic circuit differ, depending on design goals. For instance, the shape of the pole piece affects the magnetic interaction between the voice coil and the magnetic field, and is sometimes used to modify a driver's behavior. As well, a 'shorting ring' or cap is sometimes used near the magnetic gap to reduce adverse distortion effects of high current in the voice coil.

IPOD Speakers

N.Korea reject calls for UN rights expert visit

GENEVA (AFP) –
North Korea on Wednesday rejected calls by members of the UN Human Rights Council to grant access to a UN independent expert to assess the human rights situation in the country, a report said.

Pyongyang also turned down recommendations for it to abolish the death penalty, end torture, and scrap military training for children, said the UN report summarising an examination of the human rights situation in North Korea.

In total, 50 recommendations made by mostly western countries in the report adopted Wednesday by the 47-member state Human Rights Council "did not enjoy the support of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea."

Suggestions that did not find favour with Pyongyang also included calls to end forced labour and to allow for its citizens to move freely across borders and within the country.

The report was adopted following North Korea's Universal Periodic Review -- a study of its human rights record which all 192 member states of the UN must submit to every four years.

During the session, countries raised concerns about "serious human rights violations" and urged Pyongyang to open up to international organisations and independent monitors to improve the human rights situation there.

Japan and South Korea also pressed North Korea about the fate of some of their citizens they said had been abducted by Pyongyang.

In response, North Korean ambassador Ri Tcheul accused countries of repeating "fabricated" information.

"Personally I think some distinguished representatives are just repeating or echoing information fabricated and spread by others as if they have seen or witnessed themselves," he said.

Members of the North Korean delegation insisted that "the issue of serious malnutrition is a thing of the past," and that "the issue of abduction does not exist."

They also bristled at accounts of systematic, widespread and grave human rights violations in North Korea.

While turning down many recommendations in the final report, Pyongyang did agree to consider allowing international agencies such as the World Food Programme into the country as well as consider signing up to international labour and human rights treaties.

Robert King, the US envoy on human rights in North Korea, said it was "encouraging" that Pyongyang had participated in the process.

"I think it was useful, that it was the beginning of a dialogue. I hope it would be an opportunity to continue," he told reporters.

Vikings turn to rookie to replace Henderson

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. – Jasper Brinkley spent the first 4 1/2 months of his rookie year looking to the Minnesota Vikings' experienced and talented veteran defenders for guidance.
When he enters the huddle as the starting middle linebacker on Sunday against Cincinnati, the fifth-round draft pick out of South Carolina will suddenly have Pro Bowlers like Kevin and Pat Williams and Jared Allen looking to him instead.
When his friend and tutor E.J. Henderson went down with a horrific broken leg against Arizona on Sunday, Brinkley instantly became the quarterback of the Vikings' base defense for the remainder of the season.
Now it's time to find out how much he has learned. Veteran Ben Leber likely will help call the plays, but Brinkley will be instrumental in setting the defense before the play.
"I'm definitely comfortable with the scheme," he said. "Coming into it in training camp it had taken a little adjustment coming from another defense. From training camp to the time now, it's all settled in with me."
Henderson had surgery on his broken left femur and will be out for the season. Brinkley had played almost exclusively on special teams up to this point, with some time at middle linebacker in a few blowout victories.
"It's going to be a big void we've got to fill," lineman Kevin Willliams said. "People go down during the season and we've got to count on the younger guys and the backups to step up. ... It's going to be tough to fill his shoes. But somebody's going to have to step in and try."
For now, that someone appears to be Brinkley.
"He will be initially and we'll look at it through the week to see if there's a better combination than that," coach Brad Childress said. "But he's been trained there and he should be just fine."
Henderson went down with a foot injury in the fourth game last year and missed the rest of the season, so the Vikings have been here before. Last year, they signed Napoleon Harris off the street to fill in as the base defense middle linebacker, but played more of their nickel package consisting of just linebackers Chad Greenway and Leber with five defensive backs to compensate.
It seems less likely that the Vikings (10-2) would bring in a veteran free agent to take Henderson's place.
The 6-foot-1, 252-pound Brinkley made an impression early in training camp as a heavy hitter, but this is not the way he wanted to get his first big chance on defense.
"My emotions are I'm still praying for E.J.," Brinkley said. "I know he's going to call me because we are very close because he's like my mentor. I know he's going to be pulling for me."
Henderson and Brinkley share a soft-spoken nature, and a propensity for big hits.
"Well, he weighs 260 pounds and when he hits somebody he does some damage," Greenway said of the rookie. "He's a good player, got a lot of talent, he's worked hard on special teams and been a good player on there. He's proven himself to us as veterans and I think that if he goes in there and gets the start or whatever is going to happen he will be ready."
The Vikings traded up in the fifth round of April's draft to get Brinkley, who was second team All-SEC in his final season at South Carolina after missing most of 2007 with a knee injury.
"We like the things we saw from him," Childress said. "He's got a recklessness and a fearlessness and pretty good instinct for where the ball is."
The Vikings did not do much hitting in camp, but Brinkley quickly made a name for himself by popping the pads a few times in the Mankato heat.

"I'd hate to be the guy he hits," Williams said. "We just get him caught up on a few things and I think he'll be fine filling in. We can't ask him to do everything E.J. did. He just has to play within himself and I think he'll do fine."

Seat Heaters

This kind of seats prevent forward movement of the occupant in case of collision. It is a safety feature, important for front seats over rear seats.

Some car seat systems are set up with an battery-powered automatic control to adjust how the seat sits in the car.

Seat Heaters

Rights watchdog hints Swiss minaret ban could go

GENEVA – A Swiss ban on minarets could violate fundamental liberties, Europe's top human-rights watchdog said Monday in an indication that the heavily criticized vote could be overturned.
The Council of Europe said banning "new minarets in Switzerland raises concerns as to whether fundamental rights of individuals, protected by international treaties, should be subject to popular votes."
The statement by the 47-nation council's secretary-general, Thorbjorn Jagland, suggests a case may be made to seek a ruling by the European Court of Human Rights condemning Switzerland for violating freedom of expression, freedom of religion and prohibition of discrimination.
Swiss Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said the ban would come into force immediately, but also indicated that the court could strike down the Sunday vote, which incurred swift condemnation at home and abroad for banning the towers used to put out the Islamic call to prayer.
"The ban contradicts the European Convention on Human Rights," Zurich daily Blick cited Widmer-Schlumpf as saying, referring to the 1950 treaty laying out basic rights that the court in Strasbourg, France, was created to ensure member states abide by.
The referendum backed by nationalist parties was approved by 57.5 percent of the population Sunday, forcing the government to declare illegal the building of any new minarets in Switzerland. It doesn't affect the country's four existing minarets.
France's Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said he was "a bit scandalized" by the vote, which amounts to "oppressing a religion."
"I hope that the Swiss will go back on this decision rather quickly," Kouchner said on France's RTL radio. "It is an expression of intolerance, and I detest intolerance."
The U.N.'s special investigator on religious freedom, Asma Jahangir, said the ban on new minarets constitutes "a clear discrimination against members of the Muslim community in Switzerland."
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, the secretary general of the Organization of the Islamic Conference, called the ban an "example of growing anti-Islamic incitement in Europe by the extremist, anti-immigrant, xenophobic, racist, scare-mongering ultra-right politicians who reign over common sense, wisdom and universal values."
Wealthy Arab tourists might think twice now about spending their money in Geneva and other Swiss cities popular with visitors from the Gulf, and the neutral country's efforts to mediate in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could also suffer, said Daniel Warner, a Swiss-American political scientist at the Graduate Institute in Geneva.
Arriving at a meeting of European Union justice ministers, Widmer-Schlumpf argued the vote was not "a referendum against Islam ... but a vote directed against fundamentalist developments."
She defended the referendum as being "about minarets and not, of course, about the Islamic community," she said. "We are interested in a multi-religious society in Switzerland."
Supporters of the ban said the number of Muslims in Switzerland had grown sharply from 50,000 in 1980, but it is still only 4 percent of the 7.5 million population, many of whom don't practice. Western Europe has an estimated 14 million Muslims.
Voting figures showed a rural-urban split in the Swiss vote, with only 38.6 percent of people in major cities backing the ban compared with about two-thirds of the population in smaller towns and villages, officials said.
Anne-Marie Birnstiel, in the wealthy Alpine town of Gstaad told AP Television News she was disappointed by the vote and afraid of the consequences for Switzerland.
But, fellow town resident Anton Seil told APTN that "we are in Switzerland, and if I go to another country I also can't build up my church or represent my faith. So, they have to adapt to us in Switzerland too."
Switzerland isn't alone in expressing fears about a growing Muslim population, though it is the only country where voters can easily enact constitutional amendments through referendums.

France, too, has enacted laws that Muslims claim are directed at them, including a ban on the wearing of religious symbols, such as headscarves, in schools.

A leader of Italy's Northern League party, a key ally in Premier Silvio Berlusconi's conservative coalition, said: "Unfortunately we are faced with a strong attack on (our Christian) identity by an intolerant religion like Islam is." He said he advocated putting a symbol of a cross on the Italian flag.

The Roman Catholic Church, however, condemned the vote.

Monsignor Antonio Maria Veglio, a Vatican official with the Pontifical Council on Migrants, told the Italian news agency ANSA that he shared the position taken by Swiss bishops who called the vote a "hard blow to religious freedom and immigration."

Overnight, opponents of the minaret ban lit candles in front of the Swiss parliament in Bern and hung up banners saying "This is not my Switzerland."

In Zurich, unknown people smashed a glass door of the offices of the nationalist Swiss People's Party — which had backed the ban — cantonal (state) police said.

____

Associated Press writers Robert Wielaard in Brussels, Rod McGuirk in Jakarta, Ingrid Rousseau in Paris, Maamoun Youssef in Cairo, Zeina Karam in Beirut, Frances D'Emilio in Rome and APTN producer Dorothee Thiesing in Gstaad contributed to this report.

Spain wants Pinochet's widow to post bond

MADRID – A Spanish judge has ordered the widow of Augusto Pinochet, his former lawyer and two bankers to post a $77 million (euro51 million) bond while he probes allegations they laundered money for the late Chilean dictator while he was in power, according to a court document released Monday.
The order came from Judge Baltasar Garzon, who is best known for having Pinochet arrested in London in 1998 and trying, ultimately in vain, to put him on trial in Spain on terrorism, torture and other charges.
The money probe stems from that original case and was instigated at the request of a human rights foundation that works to pay compensation to victims of the Pinochet regime.
Garzon wrote that the bond is to "cover whatever financial liabilities might arise" in his probe of the widow, Maria Lucia Hiriart Rodriguez, and the other three suspects.
The former lawyer is named in the five-page court order as Oscar Custodio Aitken Lavanchy.
The bankers, who work for Banco de Chile, are named as Pablo Granifo Lavin and Hernan Donoso Lira. The bank itself and two of its subsidiaries are named as suspected accomplices.
Garzon said the four suspects, along with Banco de Chile, have 10 days to pay the bond and asked Chilean authorities to notify them of the order.
If they fail to pay, Garzon said he will order the seizure of the amount of the bond, plus an extra third of it, from bank accounts belonging to them. That total would be about $103 million. He did not say where the accounts are held.
Judge Manuel Valderrama, who is also investigating Pinochet's finances in Chile, said he awaited a final audit on the clan's assets, adding that while evidence of embezzlement of funds by military officials existed, nothing as yet was linked to Hiriart.
Rodrigo Garcia Pinochet, the dictator's grandson, said the clan was innocent and placed all its trust in Chile's judicial system.
Garzon went after Pinochet in 1998 under a Spanish legal doctrine that allowed particularly grave crimes to be prosecuted in this country even if they are alleged to have been committed abroad and had no tie to Spain. Britain ultimately declined to extradite Pinochet, saying he was ill.
Pinochet died in Chile in 2006 without having stood trial for abuses during his 1973-90 dictatorship.
Spain trimmed its so-called universal jurisdiction law in October of this year after getting angry complaints from other countries that were being investigated, such as China and Israel. Now, such probes can be carried out only if there is a clear link to Spain.
But that reform is not retroactive. The money-laundering probe began in 2007 as an extension of the original 1998 case, so the investigation has remained in effect.
The amount of the bond sought by Garzon — $77,348,374 — is equivalent to the amount of state money allegedly pilfered and laundered by Pinochet, Garzon said. He said the figure came from by a Madrid-based human rights group which requested the probe, the Fundacion Espanola Presidente Allende, which obtained it from Chilean investigators.
The foundation is named for Salvador Allende, the president that Pinochet ousted in 1973. Allende died in the coup.
___
Associated Press writer Eva Vergara in Santiago, Chile, contributed to this report.

Smelly Washers

A washing machine, clothes washer, or simply washer, is a machine designed to wash laundry, such as clothing, towels and sheets. The term is mostly applied only to machines that use water as the primary cleaning solution, as opposed to dry cleaning (which uses alternative cleaning fluids, and is performed by specialist businesses) or even ultrasonic cleaners.

For particularly dirty clothing covered with mud or dirt, it was necessary to constantly rub and flex the cloth to break apart solids and help the soap penetrate through thick, dry, or sticky layers of soil on the cloth. At first this was done by pounding or rubbing the clothing with rocks in a river, and later developed into the corrugated wash board. In Roman times a fuller would whiten clothing by stomping on it in a bucket full of fermented urine.

http://www.nufreshnow.com/directions.html

NY paparazzo testifies in Parker-Broderick case

ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio – A paparazzo has testified that an Ohio police chief told him he had access to ultrasound photographs belonging to the woman who carried twins for Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick.
Justin Steffman of New York testified Tuesday in the trial of Barry Carpenter, the suspended chief of Martins Ferry, where surrogate Michelle Ross lived. Carpenter and Police Chief Chad Dojack from nearby Bridgeport are accused of scheming to sell items from Ross' home.
A special prosecutor has said Carpenter entered Ross' home in May and removed items that identified her as the surrogate.
Steffman says Dojack offered to sell him the surrogate's address and contact information for $1,000. He says Carpenter said he had access to the plaster cast and ultrasound photos.
Dojack faces trial in January.

Sarah Palin says presidency "not on my radar screen"

CHICAGO (Reuters) –
Sarah Palin said a run for the White House in 2012 is "not on my radar screen right now" as the Republican carefully did not close the door to a possible candidacy in an interview that launched her big book tour.

Palin spoke to TV talk show hostess Oprah Winfrey as she began the roll-out to her memoir, "Going Rogue: An American Life." Palin made clear she wanted to concentrate on the 2010 congressional elections in which Republicans hope to make inroads into Democratic majorities in the U.S. Congress.

"I'm concentrating on 2010 and making sure that we have issues to tackle," Palin said in the interview taped last week and broadcast on Monday. "I don't know what I'm going to be doing in 2012. (Running for president is) not on my radar screen right now."

The former Alaska governor and unsuccessful 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate, who is popular among many U.S. conservatives, has embarked on a campaign-style media tour to promote Tuesday's release of her book.

Her appearance on Winfrey's program, one of the most watched daytime shows on U.S. television, comes as political insiders watch her every move to see if she may launch a bid for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination.

Winfrey actively supported Democrat Barack Obama during last year's campaign.

Palin is to hit a dozen states during a book tour that will take her mostly to smaller cities. The initial printing of 1.5 million copies promises the memoir written with a ghost writer will be an instant best-seller.

If Palin is to seek higher office, she'll have to overcome some political headwinds.

A Washington Post/ABC News poll found that 60 percent of those polled said Palin was not qualified to serve as president and 52 percent viewed her in unfavorable terms. Among Republicans, however, her positive rating was 76 percent.

The interview with Winfrey was interspersed with home video showing Palin playing with her grandson Tripp, exercising in shorts, and staying out of her daughter's way during a Halloween trick-or-treating excursion in their hometown of Wasilla, Alaska.

A self-styled "hockey mom" during the 2008 campaign, Palin directed her at-times tart tongue at CBS TV anchorwoman Katie Couric and Levi Johnston, who fathered a child out-of-wedlock with Palin's daughter Bristol and has since become a Palin critic.

'NEANDERTHAL TRIBE'

Palin said Couric's questions during their series of interviews during the campaign -- which critics said exposed Palin's lack of intellectual depth -- had "annoyed" her and therefore left the perception she was "unqualified."

"I thought she was asking about this Neanderthal tribe up there in Alaska," Palin said of Couric's questions about which newspapers and magazines she regularly read.

Palin recalled being confronted by Couric backstage following a thrilling campaign stop.

"There's the perky one, with the microphone, with the questions," Palin said disparagingly.

"You're pretty perky, too," Winfrey remarked.

Asked about Johnston, Palin said she did not want to respond to his criticisms, which have included comments that she is a poor parent and not getting along with husband Todd.

"We don't want to mess up the gig he's doing: aspiring porn," Palin cracked, referring to his appearance in Playgirl, an online magazine that features nude men. "I also saw I didn't go to hockey games. There are so many untruths."

Levi is still welcome to come to dinner next week for the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday with the Palins, she added. "He's family."

(Editing by Will Dunham and Steve Holland)

Target profit up, cautious on fourth quarter

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) –
Target Corp (TGT.N) reported a higher-than-expected quarterly profit on Tuesday as traffic in its stores improved and shoppers purchased more than just necessities, like food or medicine.

It broke a streak of eight consecutive declines in quarterly profit for the No 2 U.S. discount retailer behind Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N).

But Target said it was cautious about its fourth-quarter performance.

Profit in its third quarter that ended October 31, rose to $436 million, or 58 cents per share, from $369 million, or 49 cents per share, a year earlier.

Analysts, on average, were expecting earnings of 50 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Sales rose 1.4 percent to $14.79 billion, while sales at stores open at least a year, a key retail gauge known as same-store sales, fell 1.6 percent.

Its shares rose to $50.61 in premarket trading after closing on Monday on the New York Stock Exchange at $50.29.

(Reporting by Nicole Maestri, editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Transvestites on trial for theft

SHANGHAI (Reuters) –
Five Filipino transvestites have gone on trial in Shanghai, accused of drugging men with adulterated foods before robbing them in a city with a reputation for an adventurous nightlife.

Prosecutors told a Shanghai court on Tuesday the five men "dressed as women and, after leading the victims into taxis or hotel rooms, induced them to eat chocolate and other foods laced with sleeping drugs," the Xinhua news agency reported on Wednesday.

The men then robbed their victims, taking mobile phones, credit cards, and a Rolex watch. They then uses the cards to buy perfume and gold, the prosecutors said.

The five men aged from 26 to 30 were accused of committing the crimes three times from late last year to February, and were detained by police in March. Local newspaper reports said the goods stolen were worth 340,000 yuan ($49,780).

The men pleaded guilty to the charges, and "expressed remorse for the victims, the Chinese government, their own country and their families," added the Legal Daily.

The court will give a verdict at a later date, the news reports said.

(Writing by Chris Buckley; Editing by Ben Blanchard and Miral Fahmy)

Many who stormed US embassy now oppose Iran regime

TEHRAN (AFP) –
Many of the Iranians who led the storming of the US embassy in Tehran 30 years ago, inspired by the newly-created Islamic Republic, have become severe critics of the regime they helped to establish.

The students who captured the city centre compound of "The Great Satan" and who took more than 50 US diplomats hostage said they acted in response to Washington's refusal to hand over deposed shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

They feared a repetition of US interference such as the CIA-organised coup in 1953 that overthrew nationalist prime minister Mohammad Mossadegh.

Chants of "Death to America" reverberated through the streets of Tehran as Iranian masses sang the praises of the daring move against the embassy. Related article: Decades of bad blood

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic regime, dubbed the building's capture a "second revolution."

But many leading participants such as Massoumeh Ebtekar, Abbas Abdi and Mohsen Mirdamadi have since developed into reformists highly critical of the conservative government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Mirdamadi, who played a key role in the embassy capture on November 4 1979, went on to head the influential national security and foreign policy committee of Iran's majlis (parliament).

He is now in prison accused of trying to topple the government.

Abdi too has served time in an Iranian jail for his work on opinion polls saying that Iranians want diplomatic relations with the United States.

Many attribute the failure of Jimmy Carter, US Democratic president from 1977 to 1981, to win a second term in office to his mismanagement of the hostage crisis when a failed rescue operation led to the crash of two aircraft and the deaths of eight American servicemen.

The 52 staff were released only in January 1981 following 444 days in captivity, just moments after Republican Ronald Reagan replaced Carter in the White House.

Washington broke off official relations during the crisis, a rupture that has yet to be healed. Iran still lauds the seizure as a revolutionary act while Washington condemns it as an abuse of human rights.

Nowadays the annual event opposite the former US embassy, known locally as the "Den of Spies," continues to draw a massive crowd, composed mainly of schoolchildren, since the day is also known as "student day."

They listen dutifully to a keynote speaker designated by the government, often someone who was not involved in the hostage-taking.

Iranian state-run television still broadcasts footage of the radical students parading the US diplomats blindfolded around the compound and burning the American flag.

The embassy building, now under the control of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards, is used as an educational centre where occasional exhibitions highlight the "crimes" of the United States.

This year the annual anti-US day could also be marked by street protests against Ahmadinejad, whose disputed re-election on June 12 triggered the worst political crisis in the Islamic Republic's history.

Ahmadinejad's main rivals have rejected what they say is his "fraudulent victory" and their supporters have demonstrated in vast numbers against the hardliner.

Melitta Coffee Pods

Melitta Coffee Pods

When coffee reached North America during the colonial period, it was initially not as successful as it had been in Europe. During the Revolutionary War, however, the demand for coffee increased so much that dealers had to hoard their scarce supplies and raise prices dramatically; this was partly due to the reduced availability of tea from British merchants. After the War of 1812, during which Britain temporarily cut off access to tea imports, the Americans' taste for coffee grew, and high demand during the American Civil War together with advances in brewing technology secured the position of coffee as an everyday commodity in the United States.

Coffee may also be brewed by steeping in a device such as a French press (also known as a cafetière). Ground coffee and hot water are combined in a coffee press and left to brew for a few minutes. A plunger is then depressed to separate the coffee grounds, which remain at the bottom of the container. Because the coffee grounds are in direct contact with the water, all the coffee oils remain in the beverage, making it stronger and leaving more sediment than in coffee made by an automatic coffee machine.[57]

High Blood Pressure Likely in Alzheimer's Offspring (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Nov. 2 (HealthDay News) -- Middle-aged adults whose
parents have Alzheimer's disease are at increased risk for high blood
pressure, evidence of arterial disease and markers of inflammation -- all
of which may be associated with later development of Alzheimer's
disease.

That's the finding of a study by researchers in the Netherlands who
compared 206 adults in 92 families with a parental history of Alzheimer's
and 200 adults in 97 families with no parental history of the disease.

The team at the VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam measured the
participants' blood pressure, analyzed blood samples for genetic
characteristics, cholesterol levels and levels of pro-inflammatory
proteins called cytokines, and collected medical history and details about
diet, exercise and stress levels.

The study found that 47 percent of adults with Alzheimer's-afflicted
parents carried the gene (APOE e4) known to be associated with the
disease, compared with 21 percent of those with no family history of
Alzheimer's. Those with a family history had higher blood pressure
readings, signs of arterial disease and higher levels of several different
cytokines.

High blood cholesterol and glucose levels were not associated with
parental Alzheimer's disease, according to the study, which is published
in the November issue of the journal Archives of General
Psychiatry.

"Our study shows that high blood pressure and an innate
pro-inflammatory cytokine response in middle age significantly contribute
to Alzheimer's disease," wrote Dr. Eric van Exel and colleagues. "As these
risk factors cluster in families, it is important to realize that early
interventions could prevent late-onset Alzheimer's disease. One could
argue for a high-risk prevention strategy by identifying the offspring of
patients with Alzheimer's disease, screening them for hypertension and
vascular factors and implementing various (non)pharmacological health
measures."

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Aging has more about Alzheimer's disease.

LLDA Deluxe Lokk Latch

In the United States, the earliest settlers claimed land by simply fencing it in. Later, as the American government formed, unsettled land became technically owned by the government and programs to register land ownership developed, usually making raw land available for low prices or for free, if the owner improved the property, including the construction of fences.

Ownership of the fence varies. In some parts of the country all boundaries are shared; in other parts of the country you may own the boundary on the left-hand or right-hand side, however, only the title deeds can be depended on to tell you which side is yours. (A 'T' symbol indicates who is the owner). It used to be normal for the cladding to be on the non-owners side (enabling access to the posts for the owner when repairs need doing), but increasingly this cannot be depended on.

Page

Mouse Pads

According to Kelley and also stated by Alex Pang, Kelley designed the first mousepad a year later, in 1969.

Optical mice have the problem of not working well on transparent or reflective surfaces (such as glass or highly polished wood). These surfaces, which often include desk and table surfaces, cause jitter and loss of tracking on the display pointer as the mouse moves over these reflective spots. The use of mousepads with precision surfaces eliminates spot jitter effects of modern optical mice.

Mouse Pads

Congress cranks up pressure on insurance industry

WASHINGTON (Reuters) –
Democrats in the U.S. Congress moved on Wednesday to repeal the health insurance industry's exemption from antitrust laws, cranking up the pressure in a growing battle over President Barack Obama's healthcare reform plans.

The moves were the latest chapter in an escalating feud between the industry and backers of sweeping healthcare reform that would tighten regulations and create a government-run public insurance option to compete with private insurers.

The fight intensified after an industry lobbying group issued a report saying the healthcare reform plan under consideration in Congress would raise insurance premiums, which sparked protests from Democrats and the White House.

"It's time to level the playing field for American healthcare consumers and make the insurance industry play by the same rules that other industries live by," Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid said.

Proposals in the Senate and House of Representatives would repeal or refine the antitrust exemption granted the industry in 1945. Supporters said the exemption limited competition in an industry where one or two companies often dominate a state insurance market.

"It's a different universe today than it was in 1945, and this exemption is antiquated, out-of-date, and doesn't belong," Democratic Senator Charles Schumer said.

Senate Democratic leaders said they would offer their proposal to repeal the exemption as an amendment to a sweeping bill to overhaul the U.S. healthcare system when it hits the Senate floor in the next few weeks.

The House of Representatives Judiciary Committee passed a plan to limit the exemption and make health and medical malpractice insurance companies subject to laws on price-fixing and market allocation.

House Democratic leaders said it would be folded into a healthcare reform bill that is nearly ready for floor debate.

The trade group representing the industry, America's Health Insurance Plans, said in a letter to House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers that the proposals "attempt to remedy a problem that does not exist."

"We believe that health insurers have not been engaging in anti-competitive conduct," Chief Executive Karen Ignagni said.

Obama has made his top domestic priority a healthcare overhaul that reins in costs, regulates the insurance market and expands coverage, and the insurance industry has stepped up its opposition to the emerging legislation.

Opinion polls show the public is divided on his healthcare plans, including the public insurance option backed by Obama and liberals as a way to increase competition but derided by critics as a big-government takeover.

A USA Today/Gallup poll released on Wednesday found 50 percent backed a public option and 46 percent opposed it, but a CNN poll found 61 percent supported an insurance option administered by the government and 38 percent opposed.

HOUSE CLOSE TO DECISION

Democratic House leaders, who have been meeting for weeks to merge three healthcare bills into one, are close to making final decisions on a plan that could include the most liberal version of a government-run public insurance option.

Democrats were conducting a head count to gauge whether a bill that includes the strong version of a public option preferred by House liberals had the 218 votes needed to pass.

"We will have a bill passed well before Thanksgiving," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters on Wednesday. House Democrats planned a Thursday morning meeting on healthcare.

The inclusion of the strongest possible government-run public insurance option in the House bill could force a confrontation with the Senate, where the public option has less support and is less certain to be included in a final bill.

Senate Democratic leaders are merging two bills, but only one of the proposals includes the government-run plan. The negotiators discussed the public option and other items in a 90-minute meeting on Wednesday night with no decisions made.

"It's got to marinate and percolate a little bit. The yeast has got to rise still," Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus said after the meeting.

Pelosi said on Tuesday that preliminary Congressional Budget Office estimates indicated all three versions of a public option would reduce the budget deficit over 10 years and at least two of the three would come in below $900 billion.

On a related measure, Senate Democratic leaders dropped a proposal to scrap the current Medicare payment system for doctors after the bill failed to gain enough votes to clear a procedural hurdle.

Republicans and a number of Democrats opposed a proposal to boost doctors' payments under Medicare, the health program for the elderly, by $250 billion over 10 years. Opponents were concerned the measure would add to a record $1.4 trillion U.S. budget deficit this year.

(Additional reporting by Dianne Bartz; Editing by David Alexander and Peter Cooney)

AU invites al-Beshir for Darfur talks in Nigeria: source

ABUJA (AFP) –
The African Union has invited Sudanese leader Omar al-Beshir, who faces a global arrest warrant for war crimes, for next week's talks on the Darfur crisis in Abuja, a Nigerian government source said Thursday.

Eighteen heads of state are expected for a summit of the peace and security organ of AU slated for next Thursday in the Nigerian capital.

Al-Beshir, wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity, is "still considering the invitation, afraid we may turn him in, which will not happen," the source told AFP.

"Hand him over to who when he is invited by the AU?" he added.

The global rights campaign group, Amnesty International wants Nigeria to arrest al-Beshir and "hand him over to the ICC should he enter Nigerian territory."

Asked to confirm if the Sudanese president was invited, Nigerian Foreign Minister Ojo Maduekwe said he was not going "to speculate on who is invited and who is not".

Since the ICC issued an arrest warrant on al-Beshir in March, he has been to seven countries - Eritrea, Egypt, Libya, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Ethiopia and Zimbabwe -- none of which are signatories to the ICC treaty.

Amnesty said failure by Nigeria to arrest the Sudanese leader "is a failure to fulfil obligations under international law and may amount to obstruction of justice."

Former South African president Thabo Mbeki is expected to submit a report on the Darfur crisis.

The United Nations says up to 300,000 people have died and 2.7 million fled their homes since ethnic minority rebels in the western region of Darfur first rose up against the Arab-dominated government in Khartoum in February 2003.

The Sudanese government says 10,000 people have been killed.

Country singer Justin Moore to be first-time dad

ARRINGTON, Tenn. – Justin Moore is riding high with his first No. 1 song, "Small Town USA," and early next year, he'll have another first to celebrate.
His wife, Kate, is expecting their first child — a girl — in February.
The couple plans to name the baby Ella Cole. Moore explains that his middle name is Cole and his wife likes the name Ella.
Kate appears as Moore's love interest in the "Small Town USA" video.
Moore has just released his third single, "Backwoods," off his self-titled debut album. He will join Brad Paisley and Miranda Lambert on the road starting in January for the second leg of Paisley's "American Saturday Night tour."
___
On the Net:
http://www.moorejustinmusic.com

Search underway after F-16s collide over Atlantic

WASHINGTON (AFP) –
The US military launched a nighttime search for a pilot missing in the Atlantic ocean Thursday after two F-16 fighter jets collided, the US Air Force said.

One of the two aircraft landed safely at an air force base near Charleston in the southeastern state of South Carolina, from where the single-pilot fighters were conducting a night proficiency training mission.

"There is a search underway for one pilot," Air Force Technical Sergeant Vincent Mouzon told AFP, adding that the search was continuing into early Friday.

The US Coast Guard launched search and rescue teams in two vessels and a helicopter to try and locate the pilot some 30 miles (48 kilometers) off the coast of Charleston, a Coast Guard official said.

The jets involved in the collision are stationed at Shaw Air Force Base, where pilots routinely practice with night-vision equipment as part of their combat training.

Figure in Abramoff scandal to be sentenced

WASHINGTON – Stung by a jury that deadlocked on charges against a former lobbyist, federal prosecutors in the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling scandal are returning to court in an attempt to make sure one of their biggest catches is sent to prison.
David Safavian, the former top procurement official in the George W. Bush administration, says his life is in ruins because of his convictions for lying to investigators about his relationship with Abramoff. Now Safavian wants to be spared a prison term. He was scheduled to appear Friday before U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman for sentencing.
Federal prosecutors are seeking 15 months to 21 months behind bars for Safavian.
On Thursday at the same federal courthouse, prosecutors were dealt a setback in another Abramoff-related trial, that of ex-lobbyist Kevin Ring, which ended in a mistrial.
Ring was accused of lavishing tickets and meals on employees of then-Republican Reps. John Doolittle of California and Ernest Istook of Oklahoma and on Justice Department officials in return for congressional appropriations and other assistance for Abramoff's clients.
The prosecution said the government intended to seek a date for a retrial. A status conference with the judge was set for Monday.
Ring is only the second person implicated in the Abramoff scandal to fight the criminal charges at trial rather than pleading guilty and cutting a deal to cooperate with prosecutors in exchange for the possibility of a reduced sentence. The other was Safavian, whose convictions were overturned following a trial in 2006. Safavian was convicted again in a retrial.
As chief of staff at the General Services Administration, Safavian supplied Abramoff information about two pieces of GSA-controlled property the now-imprisoned lobbyist wanted. Questioned later by investigators, Safavian said Abramoff had no business before GSA.
Around the time he was giving information to Abramoff, Safavian paid Abramoff $3,100 for a weeklong golfing junket to Scotland in August 2002. Prosecutors said the amount was far short of the cost of a chartered jet, $400- and $500-a-night hotel rooms, $400 rounds of golf at the famed St. Andrews golf course and $100 rounds of drinks.
Abramoff wanted Safavian's help with property in the Maryland suburbs of Washington for a Jewish school Abramoff established and wanted to give an Indian tribe client a leg up on obtaining a contract to redevelop the historic Old Post Office in downtown Washington as a luxury hotel. Safavian subsequently moved from GSA to the Bush White House, where he became the top procurement official in the government.
In court papers this week, prosecutors said Safavian has failed to show any remorse.
Safavian committed the crimes he was convicted of "simply because he thought he could get away with it," prosecutors declared in court papers filed this week. "The defendant's abuse of his position of trust counsels against awarding him the breathtakingly lenient sentence of probation or home detention that he requests."
In pleading for leniency, Safavian's lawyers said sending him to prison would punish his pregnant wife and their 6-year-old daughter. He said he has lost his job, lost his law license and cannot perform government contracting work.
Safavian was convicted of obstructing an investigation by the inspector general at the GSA and of lying to the FBI and a GSA ethics officer and of making a false statement on his financial disclosure form.